Just scan in our QR code or type in www.firsteditiondesignpublishing.com and you will be redirected instantly to our mobile app. Stay up to date on the latest ebook news, trends and First Edition Design releases.
Just scan in our QR code or type in www.firsteditiondesignpublishing.com and you will be redirected instantly to our mobile app. Stay up to date on the latest ebook news, trends and First Edition Design releases.
From www.greenbaypressgazette.com by Kathy Walsh Nufer
Use of ebooks by Brown County Library patrons has grown 400 percent in the past year, and numbers are expected to continue to grow in 2012.

The state’s public libraries plan to purchase $1 million in new content in 2012 for a Digital Download Center sponsored by the Wisconsin Public Library Consortium. The purchase will dramatically expand the center’s offerings — including ebooks, audio books, videos and music — to Wisconsin residents.
“It should make library patrons very, very happy,” said Tasha Saecker, assistant director of the Appleton Public Library. “Nothing of this sort that I know of has been done before.”
Officials at the Brown County Library estimate that customers downloaded 7,500 ebooks in the past year, a 400 percent increase over 2010. And that number likely will jump this winter, as users begin using the Kindles, Nooks and other electronic devices they unwrapped during the holidays, said Dale Cropper, collections development manager for the Brown County Library.
Readers can download ebooks to their e-reading devices, or to their personal computers by using the library’s website so long as they have Adobe Digital Edition software installed.
“It’s not like they will replace printed books in the near future, but we definitely plan to expand our offerings to meet demand,” he said Thursday.
Downloading activity peaked last holiday season when people received their new devices and is expected to be “several times greater this year,” said Rebecca Petersen, director of the Manitowoc-Calumet Library System, which includes the public libraries in Brillion, Chilton and New Holstein.
Peterson’s libraries’ investment in ebook offerings will be possible by reallocating a portion of each library’s planned 2012 acquisitions budget. Contributing funds to the statewide purchasing pool will not increase their operational budgets, but it’s a significant outlay to keep pace with patrons’ interests.
The effort began in May when the Division for Libraries, Technology and Community Learning of the state Department of Public Instruction sponsored a statewide ebook summit. The summit’s primary recommendation was to establish a statewide ebook buying pool.
A summit committee and the library consortium later set a target goal of allocating $1 million for ebooks and audio book purchases.
In addition to $700,000 in funding from the state’s 17 library systems and its 385-member public libraries, the Division for Libraries, Technology and Community Learning will commit $300,000 in grant funds in 2012 for the ebook purchasing pool.
Currently, the Digital Download Center offers roughly 5,000 titles. Starting in January, two representatives from each library system will help select e-books and audio books for purchase, said Diana Sandberg, media librarian for the Appleton Public Library, who is one of the selectors.
The checkout period for ebooks and audio books varies from seven to 21 days. Patrons can now check out 10 items at a time.
“Digital downloading is growing all the time but it doesn’t mean people read less paper books,” she said. “It means they read more overall. Some go totally electronic but most stay with reading some print and some electronic.”
— Kathy Walsh Nufer writes for The Post-Crescent of Appleton
It’s not so much whether or not eReaders are good or bad as it is a change in the way people are reading. When primitive man evolved from drawing pictures on cave walls to words on papyrus, people welcomed the change. If nothing else, it was easier than lugging stone tablets around. It made the written word available to more people.
The invention of the Gutenberg press around 1440 made the written word available to the masses. Monks no longer had to copy tomes word for word. And not since that time has there been a bigger boon to reading than the invention of eBooks. Because of eBooks, people are now reading more than ever before. This is a good thing.
A good book isn’t about the binding, interior design, the spline or any other attribute of the book as long as the words can be read. It’s all about the words. You may have hundreds of print books in the house, from the classics to the latest releases. They all will not fit in the palm of your hand. Unlike a print book, an eReader can enlarge the font size to aid aging eyes.
eBooks offer another alternative–price to value. Some school districts are now issuing iPads to students to save on the enormous costs of text books.
Authors can now make their words available to more than a billion potential readers in over 100 countries in eBook form. It has served them well. eReaders are merely another step in the evolution of how people read. Print books will be around for a very long time, but possibly not forever. The words will not change, but how we read them will.
First Edition Design eBook Publishing (aggregator) formats, converts and submits your book to over thousands of eBook distribution points worldwide and to the top internet retailers including but not limited to – Apple, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Sony, Kobo, Google and Diesel plus schools, colleges and universities. We format your book in all the different formats needed by the distribution points, including a custom ePub file. We also provide you with a free digital ISBN for eBook publication. Also available are bar codes and QR codes. We accept all manuscripts for review. First Edition Design eBook Publishing does not censure content, but do reserve the right to edit formatting and structure to meet the standards of our distribution partners. A printed manuscript is not needed.